Showing posts with label commonly misspelled words. Show all posts
Showing posts with label commonly misspelled words. Show all posts

Friday, May 6, 2016

Misuse of "desert" for "dessert"



This pet peeve, desert being misused for dessert, is a little different from most. That's because desert can be pronounced in more than one way, depending on how it's being used--and one of its pronunciations is exactly like dessert. No wonder people get confused!

When used as a noun, the word desert describes a place, like the Mojave Desert or the Sahara Desert.

The word dessert refers to something sweet eaten at the end of a meal.

However, when it's used as a verb, desert is pronounced just like dessert: "The soldier decided to desert his post."

Okay, so if you're referring to something you eat, it's dessert. If you're referring to a place, it's desert. If you're talking about someone leaving a place, it's desert BUT it's pronounced just like dessert. Got it? :)

Still not sure which word is correct? Please post a comment below, or contact us on Twitter.


Monday, April 11, 2016

Misspellings of "definitely"



Back when more lay people (as opposed to computer geeks like me) started entering the online world, about 30 years ago, I immediately noticed that a lot of them didn't know how to spell definitely. In fact, it seems that many of them didn't even know how to SAY it! Over the years the mangling of this word has continued...actually, it's gotten worse and worse, at least in terms of how often it's misspelled.

Here are a few versions I've seen:

- defiantly (see what I mean about pronouncing it?--how do you go from defiant to thinking it's the base of definitely?)
- definately (this seems to be THE most common misspelling)
- deffinatly
- definetly

Okay, for the record, it's DEFINITELY; its root word involves FINITE--and as you can see, there is no "a" in "finite."

Still not sure which word is correct? Please post a comment below, or contact us on Twitter.



Sunday, March 13, 2016

Incorrect use of "your" for "you're"




Much like the misuse of it's for its, the misuse of your for you're annoys the hell out of me, and I don't know why people don't know the difference. I learned the two distinctly different words back in...oh...first grade?!

Your means "belonging to you," as in:

"Your right hand is broken."
"Did you bring your purse?"
"What is your favorite food?"

On the other hand, you're is a contraction of you are, as in:

"You're right about that."
"Do you know which movie you're going to see?"
"When you're eating chocolate, you're very happy!"

If you're unsure of which word to use, just think about it like this:

- your needs to be followed by the name of an object:

your hand
your house
your phone
your daughter
your spouse

- you're describes something you are doing:

you're right about that
you're going to the store
you're watching TV
you're very intelligentyou're playing soccer

Both words in one sentence:

"You're taking good care of your new phone."

It's really not that difficult!

Still not sure which word is correct? Please post a comment below, or contact us on Twitter.


Saturday, March 12, 2016

Incorrect use of "it's" for "its"



I have no idea when this phenomenon started, but it became glaringly obvious after the masses started using the Internet: it's misused for its.

For example: "The book is in it's place on the shelf." UGH!!

See, here's the thing: it's is a contraction of it is--which means that, in the example above, the person is actually saying, "The book is in it is place on the shelf"...which makes NO SENSE whatsoever.

The word they're looking for is its--which means "belonging to it." The sentence should read, "The book is in its place on the shelf."

Think of it just like the words "his" and "hers"--neither of which has an apostrophe in it. (Although I frequently see "hers" misspelled as "her's"...and I don't know why they do that, either!)

His, hers, its. Belonging to him, belonging to her, belonging to it. Simple. NO APOSTROPHES.

Some examples:

"Let me know when it's time to go home."
"It's okay with me if you come over tomorrow."
"It's supposed to rain today.

"Put the book back in its place on the shelf."
"After the test, the teacher will post its answers on the board."
"My car needs its smog test this month."

Still not sure which word is correct? Please post a comment below, or contact us on Twitter.